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They Came to Japan: An Anthology of European Reports on Japan, 1543-1640 (Michigan Classics in Japanese Studies)

معرفی کتاب «They Came to Japan: An Anthology of European Reports on Japan, 1543-1640 (Michigan Classics in Japanese Studies)» نوشتهٔ edited by Michael Cooper، منتشرشده توسط نشر University of California Press در سال 1965. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.

The Japan accidentally discovered by the Europeans in 1543 was a country torn by internecene wars waged by independent barons who recognised no effective central government and were free to appropriate as many neighbouring fiefs as force of arms and treachery would permit. The Japan which deported the Europeans a century later was a stable, highly centralised bureaucracy under the firm control of a usurping family which was to continue to rule the country until well into the Victorian age. Europeans living in Japan at the time have not only recorded the events of this fascinating period but also provided a picture of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Japanese life. Apart from a few lacunae, a remarkably full description of the country in this century—its history, people, traditions, culture, and religion—can be pieced together. They Came to Japan collects and translates excerpts from more than thirty early European accounts of Japan, many previously unpublished and extremely rare. Arranged into thematic chapters on aspects of Japanese society, these commentaries are most interesting not for what they say about the Japan but about the European writers themselves. Their attitude towards the newly discovered country and its inhabitants is clearly reflected in their letters and reports, especially when implicit comparisons are made between Japan and Europe. During the course of their discovery of the East, the Europeans had generally adopted the role of representatives of a superior race. They had taken for granted that Europe was synonymous with the civilised world, and thus the discovery of the highly developed Japanese culture and civilisation, which had grown up quite independently of Europe, came as a salutary shock. Because they could not aggressively assert themselves by force of arms in such a remote place, as was their norm, this was to be the first confrontation between East and West on equal terms. The Japan accidentally discovered by the Europeans in 1543 was a country torn by internecine wars waged by independent barons who recognised no effective central government and were free to appropriate as many neighbouring fiefs as force of arms and treachery would permit. The Japan which deported the Europeans a century later was a stable, highly centralised bureaucracy under the firm control of a usurping family which was to continue to rule the country until well into the Victorian age. Europeans living in Japan at the time have not only recorded the events of this fascinating period but also provided a picture of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Japanese life. Apart from a few lacunae, a remarkably full description of the country in this centuryits history, people, traditions, culture, and religioncan be pieced together. They Came to Japan collects and translates excerpts from more than thirty early European accounts of Japan, many previously unpublished and extremely rare. Arranged into thematic chapters on aspects of Japanese society, these commentaries are most interesting not for what they say about the Japan but about the European writers themselves. Their attitude towards the newly discovered country and its inhabitants is clearly reflected in their letters and reports, especially when implicit comparisons are made between Japan and Europe. During the course of their discovery of the East, the Europeans had generally adopted the role of representatives of a superior race. They had taken for granted that Europe was synonymous with the civilised world, and thus the discovery of the highly developed Japanese culture and civilisation, which had grown up quite independently of Europe, came as a salutary shock. Because they could not aggressively assert themselves by force of arms in such a remote place, as was their norm, this was to be the first confrontation between East and West on equal terms. Preface Acknowledgements Contents 1. The Country 2. History 3. The People 4. Social Relations 5. The Emperor and Nobility 6. Portrait of a Ruler 7. Audiences 8. Castles and Soldiers 9. Law and Order 10. The Language 11. Food and Drink 12. Dress 13. The House 14. Daily Life and Customs 15. Art and Culture 16. Cities and Travel 17. Shinto 18. Buddhism 19. Temples and Idols 20. Festivals and Funerals 21. Discussion and Debate 22. Persecution 23. Epilogue Notes on Authors Selected Bibliography Index
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